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TSW investigate and understand the life functions of Monerans
BACTERIA TSW investigate and understand the life functions of Monerans
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Bacteria are PROKARYOTES
Pro- Before Karyon- Nucleus Simplest forms of life are prokaryotes Earth’s first cells were prokaryotes
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Prokaryote Diversity Earth’s most abundant life forms
Capable of surviving in many different environments Capable of getting energy from many different sources
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Prokaryote Review Mostly single-celled NO nucleus or organelles
Circular chromosomes Cell walls Mostly asexual Anaerobic or aerobic Heterotrophic or autotrophic
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Classifying Prokaryotes
Until recently, classified in one kingdom- MONERA Now, 2 Kingdoms…what are they?
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ARCHAEBACTERIA No peptidoglycan in their cell wall
DNA sequences are more similar to those of Eukaryotes than Eubacteria Live in extremely harsh environments
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Types of Archaebacteria
Methanogens: Produce methane; anaerobic Halophiles: “salt lovers” Thermophiles: “heat lovers”
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EUBACTERIA Larger of the 2 Kingdoms
Tremendous variety…live almost anywhere Cell wall of peptidoglycan Usually contain 1 or 2 cell membranes
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Types of Eubacteria Parasitic heterotrophs: Streptococcus
Saprophages: “Death-eaters” Chemosynthetic Autotrophs: Rhizobium Photosynthetic Autotrophs: Blue-green algae
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Identifying Bacteria Shape Cell Wall How they move
How they obtain energy
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Bacteria are named by SHAPE
Cocci (ball-shaped) Streptococcus mutans Bacillus (rod-shaped) Clostridium botulinum Spirilli (spiral-shaped) Treponema palladium
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Metabolic Diversity Best illustration of prokaryote diversity
2 main groups of prokaryotes: Autotrophs Heterotrophs
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Heterotrophs Chemoheterotrophs: must take in organic molecules for both energy and a supply of carbon We are chemoheterotrophs. What does this mean? Photoheterotrophs: photosynthetic, but must still take in organic compounds for carbon
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Autotrophs Photoautotrophs: use light energy to convert CO2 and H2O to carbon compounds and oxygen Found anywhere light is plentiful (Near the surfaces of lakes, streams, & oceans)
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Autotrophs Chemoautotrophs: do NOT require light as a source of energy, instead obtain energy from chemical reactions Where would we find these?
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Releasing Energy Obligate Aerobes: MUST have a constant supply of oxygen Obligate Anaerobes: MUST live in the absence of oxygen Facultative Anaerobes: Can survive with or without oxygen
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Growth and Reproduction
If food and space were unlimited, bacteria could grow & divide continuously 3 Methods Binary Fission Conjugation Spore Formation
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Binary Fission Asexual (does not involve exchange of genetic info)
Bacterium doubles in size, replicates its DNA & divides in half, producing 2 identical daughter cells
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Conjugation Sexual (exchange of genetic material between bacteria)
A hollow bridge forms between two bacteria and genes move from one cell to another
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Spore Formation Spores form when growth conditions are unfavorable
Spores remain dormant until conditions improve
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Importance of Bacteria
Producers that capture energy by photosynthesis Decomposers- breaking down the nutrients in dead matter & the atmosphere Fix nitrogen Human uses (food, digestion, medicines)
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Human Uses
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